Word: ops
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...COOP, and it's not Dudley House. No, it's that much-caricatured and myth-surrounded place 15 minutes from the Yard--the Dudley Co-op (and its associate, the Jordan Co-op). The Unoffical Guide to Harvard's description warrants some fact-checking. Can it really be fairly compared to a "hippie commune" not cleaned "since the last time Jerry Garcia came through?" Or is it merely a unique, homey alternative to Harvard housing...
...full-time student at Northeastern University, David handles a full courseload along with the internship at KISS 108, an eight hour per week commitment. After taking advantage of Northeastern's co-op program for several semesters at various corporations, he called up KISS, was invited for an interview and was offered the job on the spot. "I love it here," grins David, "Everyone is really cool, my supervisor Skip Kelly is really helpful and is always available to answer my questions. The DJ's, too, are really cool, very nice, and they're always respectful. I look forward to coming...
...general, I want to go anywhere Gloria Steinem goes--right up to her recent op-ed piece in the New York Times in which she argued that even if all the allegations about the President turn out to be true, he is guilty not of sexual harassment but of simply making a few gross passes and each time dutifully taking no for an answer...
...President (metaphorically, of course), and with being reluctant to get out as long as their interests are being served. In response to the claim that feminists have been hypocritical for continuing to support Clinton through these scandal-ridden months, the founder of Ms. magazine, Gloria Steinem, wrote an op-ed in the New York Times (March 22) called "Feminists and the Clinton Question." In it, she defended herself and the rest of the feminist movement...
...prose of a Harlequin romance: she sees "a man in a dinner jacket with more heat than any star in the room...his height, his sleekness, his newly cropped, iron-filing hair." Forget, wrote Brown, "all the Beltway halitosis breathed upon his image...the neo-puritanism of the op-ed tumbrel drivers." Instead, say yes to the electrical, existential Now of Bill Clinton: "He is vividly in the present tense and dares you to join him there...